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New England Synod Bishop's Bulletin, January 2025
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But the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid; for see – I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people; to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord.” Luke 2:10-11
As you heard these words…did you feel the rumbling beneath your feet?
The change in the music?
The increase in the tension?
As you heard these words, did your heart beat a bit faster?
Your breathing quicken?
Your feet tap in apprehension?
For most of my life I missed their jarring political significance.
Jesuit theologian Dennis Hamm, commenting on the Gospel of Luke in The Paulist Biblical Commentary, points out early Christians would have heard these words as a bold declaration that early followers of Jesus were rejecting emperor worship and choosing instead to pledge allegiance to a baby born in a manger and a savior who died on the cross.
The titles the angel used – Savior, Messiah, and Lord – were not neutral religious titles. They were loaded and politically charged titles intentionally used by emperors to proclaim their power and status. When the angel applied these words to the newborn baby they challenged Caesar in, as Professor Hamm writes, “a stunning application to the child Jesus language commonly used in the emperor worship of Luke’s day.”
It was a jarring and provocative political statement: Jesus is Lord – the emperor is not.
The birth of Jesus, announced as Savior, Messiah, and Lord announced that a new king was in town. Not just a new king to fight the same old political battles, but in the announcement made to shepherds, who as theologian Amy Lindemann Allen suggests may have been children, both boys and girls, announced not only a new king but a new kingdom was in town bringing new ways to live together in justice and peace.
“The emperor is not the one who brings God’s peace to the world,” writes Lutheran pastor Brian Peterson. “Surprisingly, this child is. In the face of all other claims to power and dominion, the angels announce the true ruler, the true Savior.”
In this Christmas season, which the church celebrates from Christmas Eve through to the day of Epiphany on January 6th, Christians celebrate that we have just one Lord and Savior, and we worship just one Messiah: the baby born of Mary, crucified on the cross, raised on the third day, and who ascended into the sacraments. It is that Savior alone who brings peace, healing, and blessing to the world.
While we recognize that on the one hand, God works through governmental and civic leaders to bring blessing to God’s people, and that, on the other hand, God works through those called to leadership positions in the church for the sake of preaching the gospel, announcing the forgiveness of sins, and increasing faith, all humans regardless of their earthly power, influence, office, station, or status, remain a sinner who needs the mercy and forgiveness of Christ and for whom we should pray. No other human, apart from Jesus of Nazareth, is Savior, Messiah, and Lord for as Archbishop William Henning said in his installation as Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston, “When any man proclaims himself god, that means that all other men are proclaimed slaves.”
The Good News of great joy we celebrate as Christians is that Jesus is our Savior and the emperor is not, Jesus is our Messiah and anyone else who claims divine authority is not, Jesus is our Lord and anyone else who claims they alone have the answers is not.
In Jesus alone, the king who chose to place himself at the mercy of his subjects in both his birth of Mary and his death on the cross, the king who announced forgiveness to the thief dying next to him on the cross, the king who proclaimed that when we minister to our neighbors in need we minister to Jesus himself, we have our joy, our hope, and our peace.
As subjects of Jesus, our Savior, Messiah, and Lord, may we proclaim his kingdom as we announce God’s love to those rejected and villainized. May we proclaim his kingdom as we serve our neighbors in need and work for a society of inclusion and equality. May we proclaim his kingdom through our self-sacrificial acts of love and service that bring life, healing, and true freedom to the world.
May that good news of great joy of the birth of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, guide you and bless you in the new year. Merry Christmas!
Yours in Christ,
Bishop Pipho
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The Rev. Nathan Pipho
New England Synod
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
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New England Synod Bishop's Bulletin, February 2025
The choice is clear:
Meanness or Mercy …
Cruelty or Compassion …
Conformity or Freedom …
With a flurry of Executive Orders in his first week in office, the President of the United States has made his choice clear. He is choosing meanness and cruelty and demanding conformity.
In the love of Jesus Christ, as a bishop in Christ’s church, and speaking on behalf of all those targeted by these Executive Orders, I speak against the mean and divisive actions of the President of the United States. While I respect that elections have consequences and winners can enact policies that reflect the will of the majority, the massive amount of swift Executive Orders, on all aspects of American life, reflect a vision for division that do not reflect the teachings of Jesus Christ nor do I believe, ultimately, reflect the will of a majority of Americans.
All January 6th insurrectionists are pardoned … governmental workers are encouraged to snitch on their coworkers as programs encouraging diversity, equity, and inclusion are banned … permits for wind energy are rescinded while those for oil and natural gas are expanded … citizens forced into gender conformity that does not align with their lived experiences … neighbors forced into fear over ICE raids, afraid that at any moment they may be caught without the paperwork proving their legal residency in the United States and instantly flown out of the country.
These actions are mean, they are cruel, and they demand conformity to the vision of one man imposed upon the country.
I speak out today because when I was elected Bishop of the New England Synod in June 2024, I shared that my top three priorities would be to tell the story of Jesus, nurture relationships, and do racial justice.
At this moment in time, the story of Jesus I tell is told in Matthew 25 where Jesus tells a parable of a king separating sheep and goats for reward and judgment. Apart from the scenes of judgment which can be difficult for Lutherans, I see a beautiful incarnational promise. Jesus makes the stunning point that when we serve our neighbors in need we serve Christ himself. The sheep judged righteous are told “Truly, I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me” (Matthew 25:40). On the other hand, the goats judged unworthy are told, “Truly, I tell you, just as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me” (Matthew 25:45). To be in relationship with the stranger, the sick, the prisoner is to be in relationship with Christ himself! To fail to serve the least among us is to fail to be in relationship with Christ himself!
In an already polarized society where the United States Surgeon General has warned of an epidemic of loneliness as social connections come apart, and where one study among transgender adults in the United States found that 81% had thought about suicide and 42% had attempted suicide, the President is actively sowing division, breaking apart relationships, and ignoring the least among us. He is incurring judgment upon us as a nation in implementing policies that turn us away from one another and from caring for the least among us.
The choice is clear.
We can choose the President’s path in our silence and inaction, by yielding to despair, and by throwing up our hands in frustration if we believe the lie that there is nothing we can do.
Or, we can retain our power and authority as baptized children of God and choose the path of Jesus Christ in our daily interactions, in our community service, and in our public advocacy.
The path of Jesus is mercy, compassion, and freedom … it calls us to see the image of God in all our neighbors and celebrates a diversity of lived experiences … it invites us to understand that Christ-like sacrificial service for our neighbors is the key to life.
The path of Jesus leads us into trouble for eating with the outcasts, sinners, and others society reviles … it calls us to welcome the stranger, feed the hungry, care for the sick, and visit the prisoner regardless of citizenship status … it calls us into relationships with our transgender siblings and all who are bullied and targeted by the President’s actions.
The path of Jesus Christ celebrates and welcomes the Holy Spirit guiding, leading, and sustaining us in community with one another… it finds its strength and power in the Holy Spirit filling us with boldness to love, serve, build, create, and enact relationships and communities announcing the dignity and worth of all people.
The choice is ours. In my words and deeds as the Bishop of the New England Synod I choose the path of Jesus Christ. I choose the path of mercy, compassion, and service that leads to the life, healing, and salvation of the world.
I invite you to join me on the path of Jesus. As you do so, be encouraged and emboldened by the faith of the psalmist who sang: “God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam and the mountains quake with their surging. There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God, the holy place where the Most High dwells.” Psalm 46:1-4
May our actions and service for our neighbors in Christ’s name be the glory we give to God!
Bishop Pipho
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The Rev. Nathan Pipho
New England Synod
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
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New England Synod Bishop's Bulletin, March 2025
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I don’t want to hear politics from the pulpit …
The bishop is getting too political …
We believe in a separation of church and state …
Maybe you’ve heard these statements recently?
Maybe you’ve thought them yourself?
Let me be clear and unequivocal: the preacher’s sole responsibility is to preach Jesus Christ for the sake of faith.
To preach Jesus Christ is to proclaim the free gift of God’s grace announced to each of us through no merit of our own. We have done nothing to earn God’s love. Our neighbors have done nothing to earn God’s love. Preaching announces this astonishing gift for the sake of faith – that we would come to know the height, depth, breadth, and width of God’s love for ourselves and for the world proclaimed to us in the death and resurrection of Christ.
As the preacher announces this breathtaking good news, the preacher might ask the question posed by my Reformation professor, the Rev. Dr. Timothy Wengert: “Now that there’s nothing we need to do to earn God’s love, what do we do?” How do we respond to this amazingly free gift of grace?
In his essay “On the Freedom of a Christian”, Martin Luther described how this free gift of grace makes each of us both “free Lords subject to no one, and dutiful servants subject to all.” The gospel, at the same time, both frees us from using our neighbors in a self-serving way to earn God’s love and binds us to loving and serving our neighbors as fellow recipients of God’s free gift of love.
To paraphrase into today’s vernacular: having received God’s grace we are called to “pay it forward.”
We who have received the promise of Christ’s love in the water and word of Holy Baptism, and in the bread and cup of Holy Communion, are called to pay that unconditional grace forward as we love and serve our neighbors.
Paying it forward is a way that we preach the free gift of God’s love announced in Christ. Not all are called to preach with words from the pulpit, but all are called to preach Christ’s love in our daily behaviors towards our neighbors and in the public policies we advocate or oppose.
In preaching Jesus Christ, preachers will invite hearers into reflecting on how they can be preachers of God’s love as “dutiful servants subject to all.”
I’ve heard it said that preaching is a conversation between preacher and hearers. That conversation doesn’t happen in one Sunday sermon, but occurs between preacher and congregation in relationship with one another in Bible study, in pastoral care, in fellowship hour conversations, and in the joys and sorrows of life together over the years. Both preachers and hearers are formed in relationship with each other over time.
Here’s the freedom of the gospel: as free Lords subject to none, a Lutheran listener need not agree with everything the preacher says. You need not agree with everything I say as bishop. We need not agree with one another. Lutherans do not demand conformity. We do not have purity and loyalty tests. We live in the freedom of the gospel.
And yet, that freedom doesn’t leave us off the hook. Subject to all, each of us is bound in Christ to love and serve our neighbors. Each of us as disciples in our daily vocations, and in our vocations as citizens, are called to preach God’s love in our personal behaviors and in the public policies we support. Our votes, our support for candidates who enact policies, the money we donate to support candidates and policies, are all ways we actively love and serve our neighbors.
“As dutiful servants subject to all” we are called to act on behalf of our neighbors in need. This includes both supporting policies that reflect God’s generosity and speaking against policies that do not reflect the truth of God’s love for all people. Preaching God’s love, we must resist, reject and work to change those policies that sow division, and which harm and injure God’s people.
As part of that conversation between preachers and hearers, and proclaiming Christ’s love on behalf of my neighbors, I state for the record that I believe current policies seeking to erase transgender identities, prohibit DEI initiatives, allow ICE raids in houses of worship, displace Palestinians from Gaza and the West Bank, and roll back initiatives to combat global climate change do not reflect the love of Jesus Christ for our neighbors.
Let me be clear: I do not offer this as partisan commentary. I have no public comment on other parts of the President’s program which he is entitled to advance by virtue of winning the 2024 General Election. I do believe in a two (or more) party system of government that can offer policy alternatives that can be debated in a spirit of respect and understanding.
Rather, I state my opposition to these policies as a recipient of the grace of Jesus Christ and as a minister of the gospel. I state my opposition on behalf of the members of the New England Synod, and members of our longtime companion church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land, who are harmed by these specific policies of violence and harm. Where one is harmed – we all are harmed.
Regardless of your party affiliation or support for, or opposition to, the President, I expect all members of the New England Synod, in their callings as the baptized body of Christ and in their vocations as citizens, to speak out on behalf of transgender persons, immigrants, Palestinians, and any and all children of God targeted by policies that erase identities, displace people from their homelands, and impose domination of belief and identity upon others. I expect all members of the New England Synod to advocate for science and care for creation for the sake of all future generations. I believe these values are bi-partisan and non-partisan and cut across party lines. We should agree that all people bear the image of God, that all people deserve respect, honor, and safety in their homes and houses of worship, and that all people should be afforded the benefit of public policies that reflect the truth of God’s unconditional grace and mercy upon them.
Together as one Church, we must speak together at any time and in all times, when God’s children are harmed and injured. We must speak out regardless of which political party holds the White House, Congress, or the Courts. We who have received Christ’s love cannot sit by while others receive condemnation and hate. We who have done nothing to earn God’s love cannot sit by and do nothing while others receive violence through public policies. We must preach the love of Jesus Christ in behalf of our neighbors.
Policy questions are complex. In the freedom of the gospel we must deliberate, have honest conversations, and seek to understand one another more deeply. We need each other as Republicans, Democrats, and Independents to solve the complex issues before us. And at the same time, as preachers of the gospel, must advocate for love on behalf of our neighbors – especially our neighbors in need.
And so, together as Church, may we all be preachers of the gospel. Together as Church, may we all preach Christ’s love in our personal behaviors and in the public policies we support and oppose. Together as Church, may we all preach God’s unconditional grace and mercy announced for all peoples of the world in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
May our love and service on behalf of our neighbors be the glory we give to God!
Bishop Pipho
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The Rev. Nathan Pipho
New England Synod
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America